Back in 2007, I wrote a Volokh post, Should the LSAT Have A "Logic Games" Section?. arguing that the Law School Admissions Test (LSAT) should drop the logic games section because it tested abilities ...
LSAC to Drop 'Logic Games' From LSAT Starting in August "We're pleased that there is now certainty regarding the future of the LSAT's logic games section, long the section of the exam that students ...
On Oct. 18, the Law School Admissions Council announced that it would remove the logic games, also known as the analytical reading section, from the Law School Admissions Test. This change reflects a ...
Welcome to the latest installment of Law Admissions Q&A, a monthly feature of Law Admissions Lowdown that provides admissions advice to readers who send in questions and admissions profiles. If you ...
The Law School Admissions Test will be modifying its test format, starting with tests administered in August 2024. The LSAT’s multiple-choice portion currently consists of an analytical reasoning ...
The J. Reuben Clark Law School. The school's class of 2017 had a median LSAT score of 163 and a median 3.80 GPA. (Image courtesy of Dani Jardine) In October 2023, the Law School Admissions Council ...
Please join us as an LSAT instructor from PowerScore – publisher of the popular Logic Games Bible - provides an introduction to the Logic Games section of the LSAT and walks us through how to approach ...
A 2019 lawsuit filed by a sight-impaired test taker brought big changes to the LSAT, with the Logic Games section being removed by the Law School Admissions Council (LSAC). Although many law school ...
For the first time, some recent LSAT takers were told which of the four test sections was experimental and unscored Test makers used the section to evaluate a new approach to analytical reasoning ...
One out of eight men believes that he could score against Serena Williams in a tennis match. This, to me, is the epitome of delusion. According to this definition I, for one, am highly delusional.
Zachary Goldberg was frustrated. In summer 2024, the then-IU sophomore was studying for the Law School Admission Test while abroad in Budapest when he realized none of the existing prep platforms felt ...